Currently, a construction fence surrounds the school. Workers are on site most days, and a lift was in front today. The daily activity at Emerson School has not been this high since the school's last day of classes in June 2003. When the school closed, few predicted that any serious buyer would step forward so soon. The landmark could have become an abandoned wreck.
The corner building is a younger building than Emerson School, with a completion date at 1905. The two-story building is part of the Mount Cabanne-Raymond Place Historic District and could have been reused utilizing historic tax credit programs. Surely, commercial storefronts and apartments enjoy far more demand in the city than cultural centers. However, the building had the wrong owner, the Berean Seventh Day Adventist Church, which will be building a parking lot on the site.
In February 2008, the city's Preservation Board voted 5-2 to deny a demolition permit for this building. Then, in June 2009, the city's Planning Commission arbitrarily overturned the Preservation Board decision (see "Planning Commission Overturns Two Preservation Board Decisions", June 19).
The story got stranger after that when the church failed to meet the requirements of the Planning Commission decision but began demolition this summer without a permit. City officials called a halt to the wrecking, but the wreckers had already delivered fatal damage by removing most of the roof. Now the rest of the building will be removed legally. Page Boulevard will have a completely disjointed, unhinged intersection with Union Boulevard. Two prominent thoroughfares shall meet at an intersection as full of character as any generic suburban intersection anywhere in the United States. This city, it should be stated, deserves better. It deserves what it had before.
7 comments:
Allowing parking is the worse thing the city could do to the site, It destroys any remaining pedestrian scale environments while featuring a parking lot on a prominent site along two major thoroughfares.
Now that will really attract the tourists, don't you think?
It looks like the city leadership is actually looking for ways to make St. Louis fail.
What do they preach at this church? Circumventing the law to get what you want - and making the city your congregation calls home a worse place in the process - doesn't seem very Christian to me.
Gosh, don'tcha know, Really Good Christians these days can just get forgiveness from their Magic Sky Being, and all will be well. The Lard forgives in mysterious ways, apparently. M&M Fishtians, I call them: all wholesome and good on the outside, but containing within a false piety so putrescent it rots them from the inside.
Can the church be sued civilly? Were any sanctions levied by the city?
How dare you criticize a church!?
"Were any sanctions levied by the city?" Hmm, I wonder if the 500USD max City fine applies to this situation. F$%*ing outdated charter.
Yet another example of our institutional failures.
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